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British PM: Too much tolerance for extremism01:07

London (CNN)The driver of the van that plowed into pedestrians near a mosque in north London has been identified as Darren Osborne, 47, a resident of Cardiff in Wales, according to multiple UK media outlets.

One man died and nine people were hospitalized following the assault, the latest in a series of terror attacks to hit the United Kingdom this year.

Eyewitnesses reported chaotic scenes as the incident unfolded just after midnight, when evening Ramadan prayers had finished.

British Prime Minister Theresa May said the attack was directed at Muslims and condemned it as "every bit as sickening" as deadly Islamist attacks that hit the country in recent months.

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'I just can't believe that he did that'

Osborne, a father of four, is originally from the English county of Somerset, UK media reported.

The Press Association reported that Osborne's neighbors were shocked at seeing photographs of him after the attack.

Police said they were searching a residence in Cardiff in connection with the attack. That address is in Pentwyn, where Osborne is listed as living, the Press Association reported.

The suspect was not "on the security services'" radar, Home Office Minister of Security Ben Wallace said.

Darren Osborne has been identified as the man who drove a man into a crowd in London.

Saleem Naema, a 50-year-old taxi driver, and his young son said the man pictured was their neighbor.

"I know him. I've lived here for five years. He was already living here when I moved in," Naema said, according to the Press Association.

"If I ever needed anything he would come. I just can't believe that he did that. I am a Muslim," Naema added.

Khadijeh Sherizi, who was also Osborne's neighbor, said: "It is definitely him."

"I saw him on the news and I thought 'Oh my God, that is my neighbor,' " Sherizi told the Press Association. Sherizi said Osborne "has been so normal."

"He was in his kitchen yesterday afternoon singing with his kids," Sherizi said.

"I just can't believe it," she added.

Attacker shouted: 'I did my bit, you deserve it'

The suspect was first arrested for attempted murder and taken to a south London police station. Police later said he was also further arrested for the commission, preparation or instigation of terrorism, including murder.

The van plowed into the worshipers on Seven Sisters Road, a busy thoroughfare in Finsbury Park, north London, near a Muslim community center and a mosque.

Neil Basu, senior national coordinator for terrorism at the Metropolitan Police, confirmed witness accounts that the man found dead at the scene was already receiving first aid when the attack happened. He said it was unclear whether he died as a result of the attack.

Nineother people were taken to hospital, two of whom were seriously injured, he said. Two other people were treated at the scene.

Police believed the attacker acted alone, despite earlier reports from witnesses, who had said they saw two other people flee the scene.

A woman lays flowers near the scene where a van plowed into a crowd of pedestrians in north London on Monday, June 19. A man was arrested, police said, and is being held on suspicion of terrorism offenses. The attack happened near a mosque, and British Prime Minister Theresa May said it was directed at Muslims.

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Photos:Van plows into pedestrians in London

Police officers stand at a cordon near the scene. The incident happened on Seven Sisters Road, a busy thoroughfare in Finsbury Park.

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Forensics officers work at the scene.

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Pedestrians watch investigators at work.

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A forensics officer examines the interior of a van.

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Area residents react at the scene.

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A forensics officer stands next to a van near the Finsbury Park Mosque.

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Investigators work at the scene.

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Police guard a street in the Finsbury Park area.

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Police officers gather near a van on Whadcoat Road.

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Locals pray near the mosque.

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A police officer at the scene of the incident.

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Police help a woman at the scene.

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London's Metropolitan Police said officers were called just after midnight.

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Police and ambulance crews gather at the scene.

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Injured pedestrians are treated by emergency workers.

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"People were shouting, 'This is an act of terrorism!'" witness Hillary Briffa said.

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Resident Cynthia Vanzella said she was in bed when she heard people shouting. She went to the window and saw "loads of people gathering" in a corner across the road.

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Police officers stand guard.

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Emergency crews move one of the injured.

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Peter Bergen, CNN's national security analyst, said the neighborhood has a large Muslim population and that the nearby mosque used to be a place where Islamist militants gathered.

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Delay over 'terror' call

Speaking at Downing Street, May said police decided to treat the incident as a terror attack within eight minutes of receiving the first emergency call.

Residents in Finsbury Park had criticized authorities for not declaring the incident as terrorism soon enough, and police only announced they were treating it as terror more than eight hours after the event.

"This was an attack on Muslims near their place of worship and, like all terrorism in whatever form, it shares the same fundamental goal. It seeks to drive us apart and to break the precious bonds of solidarity and citizenship which we share in this country," May said.

"We will not let this happen."

Police and ambulance crews at the scene of the attack on Monday.

The assault comes on the heels of an attack at London Bridge, in which three men rammed a van into pedestrians and went on a stabbing spree at nearby bars and restaurants, killing eight people. Monday's attack is the third in London since March involving a vehicle as a weapon against pedestrians.

Emotions are high in the UK in the wake of a series of deadly terrorist attacks and a fire at a London apartment building that killed dozens. Basu said it was a "challenging" time for London and that the emergency services were stretched.

What happened

Witnesses told CNN they saw a van driving at high speed along Seven Sisters Road after worshippers had attended late-night prayers at the Finsbury Park Mosque.

Abdikadir Warfa said the van turned into an alleyway and hit a number of people before coming to a stop. Images from the scene showed a white van wedged against a traffic barrier at the dead end of a street.

"I saw a man, he was underneath the van," Warfa said, who described how his friends tried to lift the van to free him.

He said as he attended the injured, others grappled with the driver as he tried to run away.

Police guard a street in Finsbury Park after the attack on Monday.

Ratib Al-Sulaman was sitting two minutes away when the incident occurred.

"Some big van ... crushing the people in the mosque. So we just run straight away, I see police, ambulance, people lying on the floor, and a van as well," said Sulaman.

Saeed Hashi described how he fought with the driver, and how he and two others held him to the ground for 10 minutes as they waited for police to arrive.

"He punched me in the head," Hashi said, showing his bruises.

The van used in the attack bears the logo and phone number for Pontyclun Van Hire in south Wales. CNN spoke to a man at the company, who said he was the owner but declined to give his name. He said police had instructed him not to speak to the media.

Warnings of anti-Islamic attacks

Finsbury Park Mosque trustee Mohammed Kozbar met with interfaith leaders and said that an attack on one faith was an attack on all.

Tell MAMA, an anti-Islamophobia group, had visited Muslim Welfare House on Friday last week to inform the community about the need to report anti-Muslim hate incidents and to consider their safety during Ramadan.

Finsbury Park, in the London Borough of Islington, is a bustling, diverse area of north London with a strong Muslim community.

On May 22, a suicide attack killed 22 people and injured nearly 60 after an Ariana Grande concert in Manchester. The attacker was motivated by Islamist extremism, police said.

Police cordoned off the scene on Monday.

The London Bridge attack was on June 3. That attack also appeared inspired by Islamist extremism.

The head of Tell MAMA, Fiyaz Mughal, warned of reprisal attacks against Muslims after major Islamist terrorist incidents.

"We saw that very clearly after Manchester, a very high peak. We saw that clearly after London Bridge," he said.